Tag: Psychic Clairvoyant Readings in Murray

Tarot Readings in Murray are performed by someone that is trained in how to read and interpret the symbolism of the Tarot Cards. Tarot Readers do not necessarily have to possess any psychic or supernatural gifts to perform Tarot Readings. It is more of a left-brain science (logical side of the brain) much like Astrology. I have found the best Tarot Readers are also initiates of the Golden Dawn Kabbalah*.

Having a Psychic Tarot Reading in Murray is fulfilling.

Empathy might seem like a nice-to-have extra, a touchy-feely quality that's most important in personal relationships and being a nice person outside work, but expert after expert insists this most human of attributes is actually a business essential. Having empathy, they say, improves your leadership, teaches you to ask the right questions, boosts teamwork, allows you to understand your customers, and can even help you get a loan.

All of which is good to know, but do each of us have any control over the amount of empathy we feel? Is our ability to sympathize with others' something that's set in childhood and unlikely to be altered with life experience? Can you learn to get inside others' heads?

If anyone should know the answer to these questions it's Roman Krznaric. He is a founding faculty member of The School of Life in London, an empathy adviser to organizations like Oxfam and the United Nations, and a former teacher of sociology and politics at Cambridge University. Recently he shared the latest science on empathy with UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center.

"Empathy doesn't stop developing in childhood. We can nurture its growth throughout our lives--and we can use it as a radical force for social transformation," he writes. "Research in sociology, psychology, history--and my own studies of empathic personalities over the past 10 years--reveals how we can make empathy an attitude and a part of our daily lives." If you want to increase your empathy quotient, he suggests developing several habits, including these:

Getting Curious About Strangers

That guy across the train car isn't just a potential competitor for the one open seat, he's also an object lesson in empathy, Krznaric insists. "Highly empathic people (HEPs) have an insatiable curiosity about strangers. They will talk to the person sitting next to them on the bus, having retained that natural inquisitiveness we all had as children, but which society is so good at beating out of us," he writes. "Curiosity expands our empathy when we talk to people outside our usual social circle, encountering lives and world views very different from our own. Curiosity is good for us too: Happiness guru Martin Seligman identifies it as a key character strength that can enhance life satisfaction."

So how do you do curiosity right? Don't just chat about the weather or the local sports team. Instead, try to understand what makes other people tick--especially those who seem quite different from you. "Set yourself the challenge of having a conversation with one stranger every week. All it requires is courage," suggests Krznaric.

Listening and Being Vulnerable

Increased empathy only comes through interacting with others, so you want your conversations to be as deep and revealing as possible. In order to do that, you need to develop two interrelated skills, says Krznaric--radical listening and making yourself vulnerable.

"HEPs listen hard to others and do all they can to grasp their emotional state and needs, whether it is a friend who has just been diagnosed with cancer or a spouse who is upset at them for working late yet again," he writes, adding, "but listening is never enough. The second trait is to make ourselves vulnerable. Removing our masks and revealing our feelings to someone is vital for creating a strong empathic bond. Empathy is a two-way street."

Expanding Your Circle of Empathy

Empathizing with a poverty-stricken child or recently laid off friend probably comes naturally. The trick when it comes to increasing your empathy is to challenge yourself to see the perspective of those with whom you have less natural sympathy--perhaps even with your enemies. "A final trait of HEPs is that they do far more than empathize with the usual suspects," Krznaric says. "We also need to empathize with people whose beliefs we don't share."

What does this look like in practice? "If you are a campaigner on global warming, for instance, it may be worth trying to step into the shoes of oil company executives--understanding their thinking and motivations--if you want to devise effective strategies to shift them towards developing renewable energy."

This is also a particularly powerful approach for business leaders. "Bill Drayton, the renowned 'father of social entrepreneurship,' believes that … mastering empathy is the key business survival skill because it underpins successful teamwork and leadership," he points out.

Curious where you're starting from? Greater Good offers an empathy quiz to discover what base rate of empathy you have to work with.

Present day Tarot Cards draw most of their symbolism from the Kabbalah. If you want a Tarot Reading, you will want to ask the Tarot Reader if they have knowledge of the Kabbalah as well.

There are pros and cons to both; It is a matter of personal preference really which is better.

*The Kabbalah incidentally is a form of Jewish Mysticism that is

believed to have originated from Moses. However, Mystical Kabbalah is non-religious; it ties in all the Gods and Goddesses of the world. I am referring to Kabbalah, from the Golden Dawn System of thought, often called “Mystical Kabbalah” today. Writer’s such as: Dion Fortune, S.L. Macgregor Mathers, and Isreal Regardie disseminated the Mystical Kabbalah ideas through their early 1900 writings on the subject.

I Have Psychic Abilities (ft. RobbyEpicSauce)

As soon as one starts to move across national boundaries, it is virtually impossible to not notice the role that differences beginto play in our ability to interact and work with other people.

Whether it be differences in our cultures,the languages we speak, the religions we practice, our political systems or even the nature ofour economies, the more different we are, the more challenging we find it to communicate with and understand each other.

These differences go beyond just inhibiting our ability to understand one another, they also influence our desire to interact and trust one another.

In international business research, this is called 'psychic distance'.

When it comes to charitable giving and humanitarian aid, these differences or distances are no less important.

People all around the world need our help.

Aid organizations need our donations.

How do donors decide who they’re going to help? For example, today, there is sense of urgency to help Syrian refugees and people are responding with generous contributions.

However, refugees from other countries have needed our help for a long time.

Why was there not the same response from donors to the refugees from South Sudan, Bosnia, or Iraq.

Why is thathappening? We believe that psychic distance may play a role in explaining these donor choices.

Factors such as cultural distance, geographic distance, language, religion, colonial ties and even military interventions, which have played such an important role in international business research, have not been examined in charitable giving or humanitarian aid.

With online giving becoming more popular, the international reach of both small, local organizations searching for internationaldonors and large multinational organizations looking to support projects in distant countries, the influence of psychic distance needs to be considered.

This could mean that the greater the differences between a donor and the country of a distant stranger in need, the more difficult it willbe for the donor to understand and assess the distant country, its context, and theneeds of people in that country.

This may lead to greater uncertainty about the distant other’s country, negative attributions about the people in that country, and lower level of trust and connection between the donor and the potential recipients.

In turn,these factors are likely to reduce the probability of donation.

This is important because humanitarian aid organizations do not have limitless fundraising budgets.

Unfortunately, they often must make hard decisions about which needs and projects they should promote.

So, understanding how donors behave and might respond to various appeals is critical.

We believe understanding psychic distance will help.

For fundraising managers, this research could help maintain and increase donor retention rates, allowing them to help greater numbers of people in need, and improve the overall efficacy of their programs.

Thanks a lot for tuning in.

If you liked thesummary of this paper, please share it with your friends, colleagues, and students! A more detailed discussion of these significant implications can be found in this paper.